Fighting hospital-born infections starts with
simple hygiene.
While operating rooms are one of the most sterile places in the world – where special procedures and chemicals keep instruments and the doctors and nurses who use them perfectly clean – it’s a small space within a hospital. Other areas of open hallways and waiting rooms are near impossible to keep so perfectly germ-free. So, as medical professionals move from room-to-room, even hospital-to-hospital, IBM Research and OhioHealth are using sensors to help analyze hand hygiene no matter where they meet their patients.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that nearly 2 million hospital patients in the United States contract hospital-associated infections (HAI) each year, and 90,000 of those patients die as a result. These bacteria, particularly two culprits: Clostridium difficile (a bacteria, that when ingested, causes illness), and Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA (a bacteria that can be picked up by merely touching something that’s infected), also cost $4.5 billion in annual healthcare costs.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that nearly 2 million hospital patients in the United States contract hospital-associated infections (HAI) each year, and 90,000 of those patients die as a result. These bacteria, particularly two culprits: Clostridium difficile (a bacteria, that when ingested, causes illness), and Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA (a bacteria that can be picked up by merely touching something that’s infected), also cost $4.5 billion in annual healthcare costs.
Occam’s hand soap: washing hands the simplest way to stop infections
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LMT sensor above hand-washing station. |
Hospitals are asking: how do we elevate hand washing
compliance levels?
OhioHealth, a group of non-profit Ohio-based hospitals, is
working with scientists at IBM Research to make hand washing high tech – at
least in how doctors and nurses are nudged to wash when visiting their
patients.
The IBM team led by Dr. Sergio Bermudez set up Low-power
Mote Technology (LMT) sensors near hand-washing stations. They unobtrusively
and passively receive and send signals from a hospital staffer’s RFID-enabled
work badge.* The LMT knows when a staff member entered the room, knows if he or
she used the hand-washing station, and then transmits the data for compliance
processing.
A web page provides the doctors, nurses, managers and
executives with hourly compliance levels by staff ID, and a weekly report
summarizes the compliance levels per ID, job role, work shift, floor, and
hospital.
Trial Run
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Dr. Sergio Bermudez |
A future implementation might include “guest tags” given to
visitors – they need to wash their hands, too! Hand hygiene compliance levels
could also scale out to provide a risk metric that indicates the potential for
spreading an infection, given the compliance levels of healthcare workers at a
given time, and their interaction with patients.
The next phase in the current work with OhioHealth is to
reduce the size and cost of the sensors; increase the system’s sensing
reliability; and move from prototype to product.
* -- The OhioHealth
staff was given the RFID-enabled tags as their current badges do not currently
use RFID technology.
This needs to be used in restaurants also, so everyone handling food; cooks, food runners, food handlers, waiters, bar tenders, bar backs, bus boys/gals, all need to wash hands.
ReplyDeleteGood try IBM but GE has already failed with their RFID/RTLS efforts for the accuracy of the sensors is producing unreliable data and that putting in more sensors becomes cost prohibitive. This is old technology and very expensive.
ReplyDelete